As a Time 2 Kickstarter, I’m at least happy I get an eventual refund instead of an unsupported product. More than I expected out this shady crowdfunding business. Now I can just dodge the whole stupid smartwatch fad instead of buying a cheap one.
As a Time 2 Kickstarter, I’m at least happy I get an eventual refund instead of an unsupported product. More than I expected out this shady crowdfunding business. Now I can just dodge the whole stupid smartwatch fad instead of buying a cheap one.
As someone with wrist pain, I found that these vertical mouses didn’t help quite as much as the trackballs that let you just rest your arm and let the thumb do the work. I imagine it varies injury to injury, though. Example of what helps me: https://smile.amazon.com/Logitech-Wireless-Trackball-Certified-Refurbished/dp/…
As someone with wrist pain, I found that these vertical mouses didn’t help quite as much as the trackballs that let…
I kickstarted the Time 2, and don’t particularly care about the buyout—I was originally shopping for a normal watch, and then decided to spend a bit more for one that notifies me about texts and emails and whatnot. I doubt I’ll need much in the way of updates.
I just picked up my PC copy from this sale (as of last night this sale included the PC version), and the “physical” copies of this game are literally just cases with the code inside them. No Blu ray/DVD in there at all, and not even that little plastic doohickey to attach a disc in there if you wanted to for some…
I just picked up my PC copy from this sale (as of last night this sale included the PC version), and the “physical”…
Many thanks for highlighting this one, it looks fantastic and it had completely flew under my radar.
It is truly strange that Valve has done as little as they have done to encourage people to buy on Steam instead of codes on GMG, Humble, etc.,—it’s strange that you can get, say, Dishonored 2 for a discount right now on GMG, but not Steam, even though both codes are for the service. It was only a matter of time before…
My main problem with JRPG accessibility these days is that it all seems so focused on handhelds. I just don’t use them much at all anymore, I have a phone that is pretty much a tiny laptop in my pocket and always a big backlog of books to read when on the go, why buy a DS? If they’d put these out on PC as well I’d be…
I sent my PS4 in to Sony 4 times to fix noise issues, and AFAIK they didn’t do a thing. Complete jet engine every time. I ended up just selling it, even though I’m quite the Naughty Dog/Team Ico fan. :(
I’d say this isn’t such a bad thing. Instead of regurgitating press events, tech bloggers can instead focus on examining and commenting on the advertising instead of acting as an arm of it.
I think it’s wise not to legally go after pirates for sums more than the cost of the $60ish crime, and that having strict online only DRM is silly, but the fact is that there are plenty people out there who pirate when it’s convenient and buy when it’s not. My roommate in college would buy console versions of games…